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Genetic knockout of porcine GGTA1 or CMAH/GGTA1 is associated with the emergence of neo-glycans

  • Lucrezia Morticelli
  • , Charlotte Rossdam
  • , Samanta Cajic
  • , Dietmar Böthig
  • , Mikhail Magdei
  • , Sugat Ratna Tuladhar
  • , Björn Petersen
  • , Konrad Fischer
  • , Erdmann Rapp
  • , Sotirios Korossis
  • , Axel Haverich
  • , Angelika Schnieke
  • , Heiner Niemann
  • , Falk F.R. Buettner
  • , Andres Hilfiker
  • Hannover Medical School
  • Max Planck Institute for Dynamics of Complex Technical Systems
  • glyXera GmbH
  • Friedrich-Loeffler Institute
  • Technical University of Munich
  • Loughborough University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Pig-derived tissues could overcome the shortage of human donor organs in transplantation. However, the glycans with terminal α-Gal and Neu5Gc, which are synthesized by enzymes, encoded by the genes GGTA1 and CMAH, are known to play a major role in immunogenicity of porcine tissue, ultimately leading to xenograft rejection. Methods: The N-glycome and glycosphingolipidome of native and decellularized porcine pericardia from wildtype (WT), GGTA1-KO and GGTA1/CMAH-KO pigs were analyzed by multiplexed capillary gel electrophoresis coupled to laser-induced fluorescence detection. Results: We identified biantennary and core-fucosylated N-glycans terminating with immunogenic α-Gal- and α-Gal-/Neu5Gc-epitopes on pericardium of WT pigs that were absent in GGTA1 and GGTA1/CMAH-KO pigs, respectively. Levels of N-glycans terminating with galactose bound in β(1-4)-linkage to N-acetylglucosamine and their derivatives elongated by Neu5Ac were increased in both KO groups. N-glycans capped with Neu5Gc were increased in GGTA1-KO pigs compared to WT, but were not detected in GGTA1/CMAH-KO pigs. Similarly, the ganglioside Neu5Gc-GM3 was found in WT and GGTA1-KO but not in GGTA1/CMAH-KO pigs. The applied detergent based decellularization efficiently removed GSL glycans. Conclusion: Genetic deletion of GGTA1 or GGTA1/CMAH removes specific epitopes providing a more human-like glycosylation pattern, but at the same time changes distribution and levels of other porcine glycans that are potentially immunogenic.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere12804
JournalXenotransplantation
Volume30
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jul 2023

Keywords

  • CGE-LIF
  • N-glycan
  • decellularization
  • glycosphingolipid
  • pericardium
  • xenoantigen

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